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Relationships

Mumsnet has not checked the qualifications of anyone posting here. If you need help urgently or expert advice, please see our domestic violence webguide and/or relationships webguide. Many Mumsnetters experiencing domestic abuse have found this thread helpful: Listen up, everybody

Partner's relationship with ex

27 replies

whatsreasonablehere · 13/02/2026 16:38

I’m looking for some help with sorting out what is reasonable in this situation, and with managing my own emotions. I will do my best to keep this relatively brief. My partner and I have been together for approaching 2 years. When we met he was separated from his wife, but they were living together apart in what had been their family home (his children are now both young adults), and also had a second home at which spent a fair amount of time. Their expectation had been that this would be an ongoing arrangement, whereby both were free to date others but they would remain ‘best friends’ with closely intertwined lives.
This changed when he met me. We quickly fell in love with each other and it was clear from quite early on that our relationship was much more than casual dating. His wife found it difficult to accept this, but at first very little changed for her practically, apart from the knowledge that he had met someone who was becoming an important part of his life.
I accepted the situation and it was clear that he was trying hard to manage it with integrity and compassion, but things came to a head for me a couple of months into the relationship when he and his wife went on holiday to Japan (booked before we had met), and I found it incredibly difficult. In particular, I struggled with seeing their trip documented in detail on social media, but not being allowed to comment (as it would upset his wife, and because very few people knew about me – or even that they were no longer a couple). I was jealous of their holiday together, and I started to feel like his dirty little secret. I made my feelings known, and told him that I needed to step back from the relationship until he had done more to disentangle his life from that of his wife, and was willing to be less secretive about my existence.
Within hours of getting home, he and his wife had issued a joint statement on social media explaining that they were no longer living together as a couple, and they began the process of getting divorced. I was given ‘permission’ to comment on his posts, and he started spending more and more time at their second home.
Things have continued to go well between us. We spend a lot of time together and are both totally committed to building a future together. I have absolutely no concerns about possible infidelity on his part. But in recent months I have been finding his ongoing relationship with his (now ex) wife increasingly difficult. She goes to great lengths to avoid crossing paths with me (we haven’t met) yet still makes considerable demands on my partner for support, practical help and ongoing friendship. It is clear she still regards herself as having a special status in his life. I’m becoming less and less sympathetic – starting to hate her if I’m honest – and resentful of the fact that my partner is trying so hard to maintain the friendship. I really wish he would just step away, but – being so close to the situation – find it very hard to judge what is reasonable.
If any one has made it to the end of this, I would love to hear any insights you might have.

OP posts:
Ilovelifeverymuch · 13/02/2026 16:43

Too much drama, I would walk away. And what are the ages involved here that social media is playing such a huge part?

Their kids are young adults so there's no need for him to be so intertwined with his ex.

"Within hours of getting home, he and his wife had issued a joint statement on social media explaining that they were no longer living together as a couple, and they began the process of getting divorced. I was given ‘permission’ to comment on his posts, and he started spending more and more time at their second home."

This was so weird and would actually give me the ick rather than reassure me.

FrostyFlo · 13/02/2026 16:44

You've been together 2 years . How long is it that you've been ' serious ' i.e he stays the night at yours , he spends Christmas Day with you and stays over the nights , and spends all day with you on his birthday p!us stays over the night ?
I think your answer will be telling . Does he still have involvement with her parents ?
How about yours ?
Can't help but feel something is amiss with their close relationship .

BillieWiper · 13/02/2026 16:48

You haven't met? Don't you think it might help if you did? There's a chance you might like eachother?
You're hating her without really knowing her.

Put all prejudice aside, and she could become a friend of yours also?

If she or he are unwilling for this to happen I'd find it a bit suspicious, unless you've actively said you definitely don't want to meet her.

In which case you just have to keep reiterating your boundaries. If you want him to pick between you then you might need to just be blunt and come out with it.

whatsreasonablehere · 13/02/2026 16:53

@Ilovelifeverymuch we're in our fifties. He posts on facebook a lot.

@FrostyFlo We've been 'serious' since early on... in that we both knew early on that we wanted to spend more time together to see where it went, and things naturally progressed quickly. We spend a lot of time together - including this Christmas with my family. We spend the night together at least a few times a week. Honestly, the relationship is very healthy, and my only issue is how I am feeling about his ex. I am completely sure he is not being unfaithful.

OP posts:
whatsreasonablehere · 13/02/2026 16:56

BillieWiper · 13/02/2026 16:48

You haven't met? Don't you think it might help if you did? There's a chance you might like eachother?
You're hating her without really knowing her.

Put all prejudice aside, and she could become a friend of yours also?

If she or he are unwilling for this to happen I'd find it a bit suspicious, unless you've actively said you definitely don't want to meet her.

In which case you just have to keep reiterating your boundaries. If you want him to pick between you then you might need to just be blunt and come out with it.

I agree with you, but it is down to her that we haven't met. And to be honest, her absolute refusal to meet me is the main reason that I am feeling as I do as I think it makes clear that she is not ready to accept that her ex has moved on, And that given this, I would prefer for him to step back from the friendship until that changes.
He is friendly with my ex - they've been to gigs together - so I know it can work if both parties are ready.

OP posts:
FrostyFlo · 13/02/2026 17:01

whatsreasonablehere · 13/02/2026 16:53

@Ilovelifeverymuch we're in our fifties. He posts on facebook a lot.

@FrostyFlo We've been 'serious' since early on... in that we both knew early on that we wanted to spend more time together to see where it went, and things naturally progressed quickly. We spend a lot of time together - including this Christmas with my family. We spend the night together at least a few times a week. Honestly, the relationship is very healthy, and my only issue is how I am feeling about his ex. I am completely sure he is not being unfaithful.

So the ' couple occasions ' are yours which is good .
But if she is still willing to sleep with him and you have doubts that they are not , then that is a big blight on your relationship .
Why can't he move out or at the very least move into the 2nd property ?
If you say they rent it out , then in my opinion he sees the money above you .

whatsreasonablehere · 13/02/2026 17:03

FrostyFlo · 13/02/2026 17:01

So the ' couple occasions ' are yours which is good .
But if she is still willing to sleep with him and you have doubts that they are not , then that is a big blight on your relationship .
Why can't he move out or at the very least move into the 2nd property ?
If you say they rent it out , then in my opinion he sees the money above you .

They are no longer living together - post was getting very long so I missed some details out, but he does now live in the second property full time (with the occasional overnight at his ex's if he has reason to be in the area).

OP posts:
FrostyFlo · 13/02/2026 17:09

whatsreasonablehere · 13/02/2026 17:03

They are no longer living together - post was getting very long so I missed some details out, but he does now live in the second property full time (with the occasional overnight at his ex's if he has reason to be in the area).

Hmmm , good they no longer live together , but the staying over if he's in the area is very odd .
How far is that away from his place and the same yours ?
Can be not stay in a hotel or maybe his adult children's ?

whatsreasonablehere · 13/02/2026 17:18

His and his ex's homes are about an hour apart. I live about 1 and a quarter hours from him (a bit further from his ex). He could stay in a hotel. I don't think it would occur to him - and suspect he would be reluctant as it would upset her.

OP posts:
letmebetheone · 13/02/2026 17:36

Are they divorced yet?

whatsreasonablehere · 13/02/2026 17:49

letmebetheone · 13/02/2026 17:36

Are they divorced yet?

Yes.

OP posts:
MaggiesShadow · 13/02/2026 17:53

This is so weird. Unless they're famous, releasing a joint statement on social media is so cringey that I wouldn't be able to look at him again let alone be with him.

Their children are adults, they've done their dramatic grand reveal of divorcing, they own two houses but still share both, and he's desperate to maintain a close friendship with her?

Sorry, but I cannot think of a man alive who would be worth putting up with this nonsense for.

letmebetheone · 13/02/2026 17:53

whatsreasonablehere · 13/02/2026 17:18

His and his ex's homes are about an hour apart. I live about 1 and a quarter hours from him (a bit further from his ex). He could stay in a hotel. I don't think it would occur to him - and suspect he would be reluctant as it would upset her.

Why should it upset her if he stays in a hotel?
Is the divorce final or still ongoing. They are way too close for comfort, Im all for staying friendly but staying the night at hers when an extra hours drive would get him home. Not reasonable, neither of them has moved on.

MissSpindle · 13/02/2026 17:57

Why does he still occasionally stay at her house if he now has his own place, and why does he do this especially as they are now divorced? Huge red flags here, particularly him saying to not do that "would upset her". They don't act like they are divorced at all.

It is your life but I absolutely would not put up with this. I do suspect slightly that they are still sleeping together hence the "occasional overnight stays".

Seeingadistance · 13/02/2026 17:57

letmebetheone · 13/02/2026 17:53

Why should it upset her if he stays in a hotel?
Is the divorce final or still ongoing. They are way too close for comfort, Im all for staying friendly but staying the night at hers when an extra hours drive would get him home. Not reasonable, neither of them has moved on.

Staying at his ex’s is extremely bizarre, no matter how near or far she stays. An hour’s drive away! Nope!

Arlanymor · 13/02/2026 18:04

All of this is completely bizarre - sorry but it is. They had two homes but one of them didn't fully move after the separation? 'Living together apart' is not a thing. if you are in the same house, you are living together. Regardless of what bedroom you are in, you share all of the other rooms and that is not 'apart'.

The social media stuff is barking. So they went on a pre-arranged holiday (as a family or just the two of them?) and you were upset that you couldn't comment on their posts? I mean it was a couple of months into dating him you said - at that point I wouldn't be telling anyone anything about a new relationship on social media on my OWN page/account, let alone commenting on another person's posts when I had known them for less time than a lump of cheddar cheese in my fridge. And you were jealous? You had known him for little more than eight weeks! That's not jealous, that's possessive. And what's with this 'announcement' all sounds rather grandiose and unnecessary. Why don't people keep private things private anymore? The world doesn't have to know (and generally isn't interested).

Why do you need to meet her? She doesn't want to meet you - she is going out of her way not to meet you - it's too painful for her, so leave her alone. There aren't young children in the mix - leave her be. You don't need to meet her, you don't need to know her. You're 'starting to hate her'? She's done nothing to you.

This will come across as harsh, but bloody hell you're older than me and I am ancient. We've been around the sun too many times for this kind of nonsense.

Long story short:

  1. Leave her alone, she is nothing to do with you.
  2. If you have issues with the way your partner treats you then recognise it's his choice to treat you that way and talk to him about it.

I honestly think you are using her as a convenient scapegoat for his lack of backbone.

outerspacepotato · 13/02/2026 18:04

You can't force him to have boundaries he doesn't want to have. That's controlling. If him staying close with his ex is so difficult, the relationship isn't working for you. I think he's still enmeshed with her, but that's for him to handle or not.

sqwer · 13/02/2026 19:03

I would not find this acceptable. If you don’t, end the relationship.

Endofyear · 13/02/2026 19:40

I don't know why you're hating her when it's obvious that he wants an ongoing relationship and friendship with her. This is all his choice, he's the one in a relationship with you and he's the one continuing to see her and even stay at her home on occasion.

He is the problem here and he is the only one who can change the status quo. You need to be honest with him that unless he is willing to step away from his ex wife, your relationship doesn't stand a chance.

tripleginandtonic · 13/02/2026 19:51

He has another house. A grown up who's split with their bf/gf would move into it. The fact he hasn't suggests he's hedging his bets.

Bonbon21 · 13/02/2026 19:52

Discuss your feelings and boundaries with him once and for all. Their kids are adults, he has no reason to stay at her home. He has no reason to be in her company apart from adult kids 'celebration' events.
If he can't see that then you are not his priority, after his kids of course.
I would be rethinking the relationship under those circumstances

MTOandMe · 13/02/2026 20:11

The thing is, it’s not that she still thinks she has a special status. She actually does. He’s keeping her there, on the periphery, for some reason.

ValentineSchmalentines · 14/02/2026 17:08

My dear, he's just not that into you I'm afraid. 🫤
He doesn't prioritise you over his ex; what does that tell you?

whatsreasonablehere · 14/02/2026 18:27

ValentineSchmalentines · 14/02/2026 17:08

My dear, he's just not that into you I'm afraid. 🫤
He doesn't prioritise you over his ex; what does that tell you?

Honestly, that is SO not the issue here.

Thank you to everyone who has commented. It has really helped me gain a sense of perspective. I have shown him this thread, and we have had a really good conversation off the back of it.
I'm not about to issue him with an ultimatum, or demand that he completely change the way he interacts with his ex over night, but he has made clear that I am his priority, and that he will be guided by how his actions affect me in future.

OP posts:
Merseymum1980 · 31/03/2026 20:06

It will get easier over time op.
As for long term things you will have to try to overcome your feelings for the kids sake.
My.dad left my mum for my step mum years ago. For some bizarre reason my step mum refuses to be in the same room.as my mum 43 years later (my mum is not remotley interested in my dad). Its made life events very awkward.
Try a little for your kids

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